Arterial oxygen saturation in preterm neonates without respiratory failure
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Cited by (55)
Neonatal Respiratory Therapy
2018, Avery's Diseases of the Newborn: Tenth EditionThe evolution of modern respiratory care for preterm infants
2017, The LancetCitation Excerpt :However, the accuracy of pulse oximetry is limited, particularly when detecting hyperoxia. Observational studies have challenged the premise that physiological oxygen saturation in healthy preterm infants (93–100%)4 is an appropriate target oxygen concentration in extremely preterm infants receiving supplemental oxygen. Extremely preterm infants for whom oxygen saturation targets were low (70–90%) were found to be at lower risk of developing retinopathy of prematurity than those for whom oxygen saturation targets were high (88–98%), without any difference in the risk of death or cerebral palsy.5
Neonatal Respiratory Therapy
2017, Avery's Diseases of the Newborn, Tenth EditionSleep and respiratory physiology in children
2014, Clinics in Chest MedicineCitation Excerpt :Although healthy preterm infants have baseline Spo2 values in the same range as full-term infants, the variability about the baseline is greater in preterm infants. The frequency of transient desaturation episodes to 80% or less varies considerably with age and between individual patients, with rates being highest in preterm infants, lower in term infants,60,61,64–67 and lowest in older children and adolescents. During the regular breathing of quiet or NREM sleep, most infants do not have episodes of desaturation, or when episodes do occur they are brief.
Apnea of Prematurity
2012, Principles and Practice of Pediatric Sleep Medicine: Second EditionRecommendations for long-term home oxygen therapy in children and adolescents
2013, Jornal de Pediatria